Salary Man Kintaro (Japanese:サラリーマン金太郎,Hepburn:Sararīman Kintarō) is a Japanesemanga series written and illustrated byHiroshi Motomiya. It was serialized inShueisha'sseinen manga magazineWeekly Young Jump from 1994 to 2002, with its chapters collected in 30tankōbon volumes. It was followed by three series;Salary Man Kintaro: Money Wars-hen (2005–2006),Shin Salaryman Kintaro (2009–2011), andSalary Man Kintaro: 50-sai (2015–2016),
The manga follows Kintaro Yajima, a formerBōsōzoku gang leader who, as a promise to his late wife, has become asalaryman.
Alive-action film adaptation premiered in 1999. Atelevision drama adaptation aired for four seasons; the first one in 1999, the second in 2000, the third in 2002, and the fourth in 2004. Another drama adaptation aired for two seasons; the first one in 2008 and the second in 2010. A 20-episodeanime television series aired in 2001. Two live-action films are set to premiere in 2025.
The manga has had over 35 million copies in circulation.
Ahigh school dropout and formerBōsōzoku who retired to become a fisherman, but after he saved Morinosuke Yamato he was offered a job at Yamato Construction in the sales department.
Née Suenaga (末永). A high class woman who once had an affair with the late politicianSeishirō Kuroda (黒田征四郎,Kuroda Seishirou). She still has strong political and financial connections and later becomes Kintaro's wife.
Ryuta Yajima (矢島竜太,Yajima Ryuta)
The son of Kintaro and his late wife Akemi.
Mimi Suenaga (末永美々,Suenaga Mimi)
The daughter of Misuzu from her affair with Kuroda.
Akemi Yajima (矢島明美,Yajima Akemi)
Kintaro's first wife, a kind blind woman who dies giving birth to Ryuta.
Morinosuke Yamato (大和守之助,Yamato Morinosuke)
One of the many men that Kintaro saves. Chairman of Yamato Construction. He believes in Kintaro all the way.
In April 2005, the series started appearing as anonline comic,[6] and a sequel, titledSalary Man Kintaro: Money Wars-hen (サラリーマン金太郎 マネーウォーズ編), was serialized inWeekly Young Jump from November 11, 2005, to August 10, 2006.[a] Shueisha collected its chapters in fourtankōbon volumes, released from April 19 to December 19, 2006.[10]
A third series, titledShin Salaryman Kintaro (新サラリーマン金太郎), started inWeekly Young Jump on January 15, 2009;[11] an additional series, titledShin Salary Man Kintaro Junfudō (新サラリーマン金太郎 順不同, "New Salary Man Kintaro in no Particular Order"), started on April 1, 2010.[12] Shueisha collected its chapters in seventankōbon volumes, released from August 19, 2009,[13] to March 18, 2011.[14]
A fourth series, titledSalary Man Kintaro: 50-sai (サラリーマン金太郎 五十歳), was serialized inWeekly Young Jump from April 16, 2015,[15] to February 10, 2016.[16] Shueisha collected its chapters in fourtankōbon volumes, released from July 17, 2015,[17] to April 19, 2016.[18]
The manga was digitally available in English on the NTT Solmare's ComicFriendsFacebook app in 2012;[19] the service closed in that same year.[20] Manga Planet added the series to its digital service on August 3, 2020.[21]
In September 2024, it was announced that two live-action films, directed byTen Shimoyama [ja], with scripts bySinichi Tanaka [ja], and starringNobuyuki Suzuki as Kintaro Yajima, would premiere in Japan; the first film,Salaryman Kintaro Akatsuki-hen (サラリーマン金太郎【魁】編, "Salaryman Kintaro Dawn"), premiered on January 10, 2025, andSalaryman Kintaro Sakigake-hen (サラリーマン金太郎【魁】編, "Salaryman Kintaro Vanguard") premiered on February 7 of the same year.[23][2]
Atelevision drama adaptation, starringKatsunori Takahashi as Kintaro Yajima, was broadcast onTBS. The first season was broadcast for 11 episodes from January 10 to March 21, 1999.[24][25] A second 12-episode season was broadcast from April 9 to July 2, 2000.[26][27] A third 11-episode season was broadcast from January 6 to March 17, 2002.[28] A fourth 10-episode season was broadcast from January 15 to March 18, 2004.[29][30]
Another drama series, starringMasaru Nagai [ja] as Kintaro,[31] was broadcast onTV Asahi. The first season was broadcast for 10 episodes from October 10 to December 12, 2008.[32] A second 10-episode season was broadcasr from January 8 to March 12, 2010.[33][34]
A 20-episodeanime television series adaptation, animated by JCF, was broadcast onBS-i from February 18 to March 18, 2001. The opening theme, "Jikū: Toki no Sora" (時空~ときのそら~, "A Space of Time"), was performed byYumi Matsuzawa, while the ending theme, "Heaven: Boku no Naka no Tengoku" (Heaven~僕の中の天国~, "We're in Heaven") was performed by Norishige Takahashi.[1]
In North America, the series was licensed by Arts Magic.[35] It was released on five DVDs from May 31, 2005,[36] to March 28, 2006.[37]
^It was serialized in the magazine from its 49th issue of 2005 to the combined 37th–38th issue of 2006,[7] released on November 11, 2005,[8] and August 10, 2006,[9] respectively.